Hottentot Venus
By: Edward • Essay • 1,720 Words • January 27, 2010 • 1,318 Views
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For this book report, I choose the book written by Barbara Chase-Riboud called Hottentot Venus. This book is about a real female from the KhoeKhoe nation and her tragic life. This Young Khoisan, Ssehura, is an orphan in South Africa around the 1700s. After becoming a slave by a Dutch Afrikaner, her name changed to Saartjie (means Little Sarah in Dutch.) As the story goes on, it explains more of Saartjie’s culture, which includes the grooming to be more desirable for marriage. In Khoisan’s culture, female massage their buttocks with special ointment so they will swell, and their genitalia are also stretched. Because of this, Saartjie becomes a physical curiosity and sexual fetish to her white master. Later on, the white master is persuaded by an Englishman to send her to London to become a sideshow sensation. There, along with other “things-that-never-should-never-have-been-born,” she becomes known as “Hottentot Venus.” The story moved on until the end where Saartjie speaks as a dissected corpse stripped of her womanhood by scientists determined to confirm her as the missing link in the Great Chain of Being.
The book is opened with a Heroine’s Note to tell us more about how the name Hottentot comes to be. It is around 1619, where the Portuguese discovers the KhoeKhoe nation in the Eastern Coast of South Africa. The Portuguese then are followed by the Dutch who named the Khoisan, Hottentot, which means “stutterer” in Dutch because of
the way the Khoisan’s language sounds. Dutch are the ones who introduced the clan to private properties, land theft, and fences. The English succeeds the Dutch, and they organized the Khoisan into categories of Hottentots, Negroes, and Bushmen, while claming themselves and others like them white.
On January 1816, the story is opened on the day of Saartjie’s Birthday which also falls on the day of New Year. Since it is a holiday, the circus in Paris or what Saartjie calls “the freak show” close. In this chapter we learn that Saartjie has serious illness, where she can be burning with fever and her chest would be in pain while she is coughing out blood. She has never heard of this kind of sickness in her clan and only until her white servant, Alice Unicorn, tells her about it that she finally understands. Saartjie then move on to describing the freak show and how she has to stay in an eight-by-twelve-foot bamboo cage, almost naked in the cold, surrounded by white faces showing all looks of pity, horror, and terror.
September 1792, Saartjie’s recollection was that her mother, Aya Ma, a woman about 26 years of age, is sitting on a beach watching all her seven children. It is about when she is almost four that her mother is killed by one of the raid, as her severed head rolls and stopped by the edge of water. These raids are hunting sports for the Englishmen and will decapitate anyone in the way. After her death, Saartjie’s father is too shocked, and at the end he divides all the children among the relatives. Five years after that tragedy, the father is also killed by the same English landlords for trespassing. Saartjie has now becomes a complete orphan, and her aunt sells her to a Wesleyan missionary, the Reverend Cecil Freehouseland. He was the one to name her Saartjie, and around that time she was nine. His kindness and generosity towards her makes her fall deeply in love with him. The happiness soon ends, for the Reverend died suddenly of Cholera. In the will, Saartjie is freed and should have been awarded ten pounds, but the reverend’s family never gave it to her, they only took her back to the clan. Saartjie is about thirteen when she returns to her aunt, and that is approaching the age of marriage. Here is where we learn that the clan’s tradition. Female’s bottom parts are massaged with butter and secret swelling ointments until the spring one foot from the curve of the spine. They then are fed peanut oils, corn porridge and honey to add more pounds to thighs above the knees. Another important part of the tradition is the insertion of pebble to stretch the delicate membranes of the vagina. After following through all the traditions, Saartjie marries a first cousin, Kx’au, as a husband. Around this time, the Dutch is too busy to raid any Khoisan, for they have a war with the English. The newlywed is happy until Kx’au mysteriously dies in the bush of a gunshot wound. Because of the trauma, the newly conceived baby came out prematurely and died after a few months. Not able to handle anymore murders, Saartjie decides to leave for Cape Town. The clan’s rainmaker warned her not to go; however, Saartjie’s mind was already settled.
July 1805, Saartjie decides to leave for Cape Town, which is a twenty-three-day journey on foot. When she gets there, everyone starts pushing her off the